Abstract
This paper presents the composite drought indicator (CDI) that Jordanian, Lebanese, Moroccan, and Tunisian government agencies now produce monthly to support operational drought management decision making, and it describes their iterative co-development processes. The CDI is primarily intended to monitor agricultural and ecological drought on a seasonal time scale. It uses remote sensing and modelled data inputs, and it reflects anomalies in precipitation, vegetation, soil moisture, and evapotranspiration. Following quantitative and qualitative validation assessments, engagements with policymakers, and consideration of agencies’ technical and institutional capabilities and constraints, we made changes to CDI input data, modelling procedures, and integration to tailor the system for each national context. We summarize validation results, drought modelling challenges and how we overcame them through CDI improvements, and we describe the monthly CDI production process and outputs. Finally, we synthesize procedural and technical aspects of CDI development and reflect on the constraints we faced as well as trade-offs made to optimize the CDI for operational monitoring to support policy decision-making—including aspects of salience, credibility, and legitimacy—within each national context.
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Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.Introduction
The operational identification and quantification of drought location, onset, severity, duration, and recovery is a complex problem due to both scientific and normative challenges. Resource allocation for drought management is politically contentious, and governmental decision-making on what type(s) of drought to monitor regularly and how, and manage proactively, is a values-driven and political choice that empirical evidence can inform1,2. Governmental and non-governmental stakeholders in Middle East and North Africa (MENA) countries consider agricultural drought to be the first priority for improved national capacity in drought risk management, with hydrological drought a close second3,4.
Most MENA governments monitor drought operationally using the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI-3) calculated from agro-meteorological observation sites5. However, challenges arise due to the distribution and density of stations, as well as issues with data accessibility, record, and quality control3.
MENA governments acknowledge these issues, and at the WMO-convened High-Level Meeting on National Drought Policy in 2013, they requested technical support to improve drought risk management systems. Through the resultant USAID-funded MENAdrought project [https://menadrought.iwmi.org/], applied researchers developed a common general modelling framework for drought monitoring and then tested that system and tailored it to meet the requirements of government agencies in four countries (Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, and Tunisia).
This paper presents the Composite Drought Indicator (CDI) that is now produced monthly by those governments and integrated into Drought Action Plans used by national or basin agencies6. The CDI reflects anomalies in precipitation, vegetation, soil moisture, and evapotranspiration using a convergence of evidence approach7,8 that is becoming increasingly common in national and regional drought monitoring systems the world9,10. It has already been used by agencies to support drought management responses and resource allocation; for example, in early 2022, information from the CDI was used to target, size, and justify the provision of drought relief nationally in Morocco11 and in the Tafilah Governorate of Jordan12.
The paper also describes the iterative validation and co-development process that:
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a.
shaped the technical system’s refinements overall and for each country to reflect agencies’ constraints (modelling and institutional) and needs (technical and policy), and
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b.
enabled officials—and the agencies they represent—to become confident enough in the resultant system to use it for operational drought management decision support.
As such, the paper focuses on the scientific and technical end of the science-policy interface. It describes chronological development and procedural aspects to highlight the multi-faceted and interactive requirements for development of applied and policy-relevant environmental monitoring tools, particularly in the Global South. Case studies demonstrating how to go about developing and embedding such tools for climate extreme management in operational contexts are critical to support climate change adaptation and achieve the goals of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and Sendai Framework13. Considerations, approaches, methods, processes, and/or findings should be transferable to socio-economically, governmentally, and/or agro-ecologically comparable countries, if not more universally.
Defining needs—CDI requirements and the science–policy interface
In each country, government agencies and other stakeholders described a range of requirements for drought monitoring generally3, and the CDI specifically6,14:
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First priority is monitoring agricultural drought and particularly rainfed systems for cereals, rangelands, olives, and legumes;
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Output temporal requirements—monthly or more frequently;
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Output spatial requirements—adequate spatial resolution to capture major agricultural and hydrological basins and shifts in agro-ecological zones;
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Simplicity and ease of production and use—must be producible monthly by national agencies, taking into account computing and modelling requirements, staff capacity, and internet bandwidth; and
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Adequate accuracy and precision for drought management policy decision-making.
These needs shaped the CDI development process. They also shaped stakeholders’ considerations of the CDI’s credibility (accuracy), salience (usefulness for decision-making), legitimacy (alignment with users’ values and views), and accessibility, characteristics that are critical for stakeholders’ application of scientific information in policy processes2,15,16. Throughout this paper, we identify in italics which of these characteristics factored into specific decision-making for CDI assessment and/or development.
Iterative co-development—CDI development stages and role of CDI validation
National agencies were closely involved and/or led CDI co-development workstreams in each Stage, as shown in Fig. 1(legitimacy). Stage 0 predates the MENAdrought project and resulted in a CDI for Morocco17. In Stage 1, we replicated that system in other countries, assessed stakeholder needs, and tested CDI outputs in national workshops3,4.
This paper focuses primarily on Stages 2 and 3, and unless otherwise specified, mentions of ‘the CDI’ refer to the version now produced by agencies.
In Stage 2, we undertook a range of validation studies and in Stage 3 iterative refinements to the CDI modelling and production process based on those findings as well as stakeholders’ needs and constraints. Rykiel18 defines model validation as “demonstration that a model within its domain of applicability possesses a satisfactory range of accuracy consistent with the intended application of the model”. Validation therefore has empirical/objective and normative/subjective components related to the criteria noted above. In particular, the “range of accuracy” aspect is primarily objective and related to the information’s credibility and salience; whereas the “satisfactory” and “intended application” aspects are normative and related to salience and legitimacy.
The process and forms of validation we undertook reflect this, which opened the evaluative space for integration of multiple usable knowledge types19. The validation efforts aimed to determine, and subsequently improve, the CDI’s performance in relation to the accuracy of the information it provides (reduce error and make it more credible) as well as the utility of the information for guiding drought-related action (increase salience and legitimacy;15) according to stakeholder requirements.
Following Stage 3, national agencies now produce the CDI monthly and provide it to inter-agency technical and management committees (salience,6). In Morocco they are also made public [https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1z0hdz3xuU8e0ogvev3grFsC_jhwHc85L&ll=31.654976915646525%2C-2.4285752472437583&z=5], albeit with a delay.
Methods and data for CDI production
Requirements noted in Section "Defining needs—CDI requirements and the science-policy interface" constrained our possible choices for CDI development. Review of in-situ monitoring data availability, quality, coverage, and accessibility in each country (partially reported in3) indicated that it would not be possible to produce a CDI monthly with adequate national coverage using that observational data in any of the countries. Paucity of data beyond precipitation, temporal coverage of data, and timeliness of precipitation data collection and collation were the most immediate barriers.
As a result, we opted to rely entirely on an ensemble of satellite remote sensing and modelled data for operational CDI production (accessibility).
In this section, we summarily describe:
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1.
CDI input indices and weighting;
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2.
CDI input index calculation;
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3.
CDI integration and ranking using sliding windows; and
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4.
CDI dissemination using a web interface.
Note that Section "CDI validation findings and iterative refinements to the CDI" also includes summary descriptions of validation methods.
CDI input indices and weighting
CDI input indices and weightings were initially based on the CDI developed by Bijaber et al. (2018) due to its agricultural drought focus. They were subsequently validated and refined with stakeholders (see Section "CDI validation findings and iterative refinements to the CDI";3,4,14) and by the conclusion of Stage 1 had settled into their current form:
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3 months Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI-3; 40%;20);
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Normalized Difference Vegetation Index anomaly (NDVI; 20%;21);
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Root zone soil moisture anomaly (hereafter, SMA; 20%;22); and
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Day-night land surface temperature amplitude anomaly (hereafter, diurnal LST; 20%;23).
The first three indices are widely used for agricultural drought monitoring (salience, legitimacy;24), and the fourth is an effective proxy for evapotranspiration (relative error of 5 to 10% according to23), which is also commonly used. In our context, diurnal LST was substantially easier to calculate, and potentially more accurate, than calculating evapotranspiration anomalies directly (accessibility).
CDI input index calculation
The methods and data for calculation of CDI input indices are primarily shown in Table 1. It includes the specific calculation method for each input index as well as its data source, latency, period of record, temporal and spatial scale, and any additional data filtering or processing. Section "Iterative development of precipitation inputs" provides rationale for the difference in SPI-3 production across the countries.
In the remainder of this sub-section, we describe:
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Noah-MP model establishment and parameterization (used for SMA and diurnal LST);
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A novel application of harmonic analysis and Fourier transformations for cloud masking and data fusion for gap-filling related to diurnal LST; and
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Cloud masking, gap-filling, and data smoothing using Savitzky-Golay filters for NDVI.
Supplementary Information A provides additional details on (1) the novel harmonic analysis and Fourier transformation method and results, (2) development and use of convolutional neural network models for SPI-3 production in Morocco, and (3) NDVI gap-filling results.
Establishment and parameterization of the Noah-MP modelling framework
The SMA and diurnal LST indices are based on outputs of the LIS modelling framework30 running the multiple parameterizations land surface model Noah-MP31.
We used the dynamic phenology model within Noah-MP to account for plant processes that respond to cold, heat, and drought stresses32. The model simulates leaf area index due to senescence or herbivory. Therefore, during drought periods, the green vegetation fraction lowers and produces feedbacks to increase surface temperature and further reduce soil moisture. This was the major refinement made to SMA production in Stage 3.
We used input parameters including the MODIS-IGBP land cover data33, STATSGO & FAO soil texture data34,35, and SRTM for elevation and slope 36. The model was forced with Global Data Assimilation System (GDAS) data [National Climatic Data Center, NESDIS, NOAA, U.S. Department of Commerce Dataset Title: NCEP EDAS and GDAS (FNL) Model Data (DSI-6141); [37] for temperature, relative humidity, wind, rainfall and downward surface solar radiation. The model was spun up using 4 cycles per day (at 0000. 0600. 1200. and 1800 UTC) covering the period between 2000 and 2015.
Novel application of harmonic analysis and Fourier transformations for cloud masking and gap-filling with data fusion
MODIS LST data have issues with cloud masking even after the application of quality coefficients38, especially cloud edges and thin clouds, which are the major sources of contamination39. Figure A4 exemplifies the extensiveness of this problem.
To overcome these challenges, we applied a new method that combines remotely sensed data and model gap-filling: we used harmonic analysis and Fourier transformations to identify cloud-affected pixels and gap-fill temperature data reconstructed from quality-controlled MODIS values and Noah-MP model outputs.
Firstly, we used the Harmonic ANalysis of Time Series (HANTS) algorithm40,41,42 on MODIS land surface temperature values (Ts) to produce a new, smoothed time series (Tshants). Ts values that deviated more than 4 °C from the Tshants were flagged as cloud affected and removed from the clean dataset. We decided on the 4 °C threshold after visually examining cloudy scenes from multiple regions and times from 2015 data, and then using expert judgment alone due to data scarcity for model validation.
Then cloud affected pixels were replaced by updated estimates of Ts as follows:
Step 1: create a “daily perturbation” model (dTobs) for MODIS-observed Ts and smoothed Tshants such that dTobs = Ts – Tshants.
Step 2: simulate LST values (Ts model) using Noah-MP and produce a smoothed time series (Tshants model). We then produce a daily perturbation model (dTmodel) of the simulated values and smoothed time series as shown in Step 1.
Step 3: establish a relationship between dTobs and dTmodel through a simple linear regression analysis.
Step 4: estimate dTobs for clear and cloudy days as follows:
In Eq. 1, a and b are the regression coefficients between dTmodis and dTobs.
Step 5: For cloud-affected pixels, there is no value of Ts except the harmonic estimate of Tshants. By producing daily values of dTobs from Eq. 1, we can realistically correct the smoothed Tshants and reconstruct temperature data (Tsreconst) for the missing cloudy days as follows:
Step 6: Repeat all steps each month for CDI production because regression coefficients change.
The presented gap-filling method does not rely on the absolute values of modelled temperature. It thus avoids known modelling errors in quantifying absolute values and smoothed time series of LST. Rather, this method relies on the model to simulate daily variation of LST. More detail and pseudocode are shown in Supplementary Information A.
Improving NDVI outputs using Savitzky–Golay filters
Like for LST, eMODIS and VIIRS NDVI products have issues with cloud masking even after the application of quality coefficients [38,39]. For the Stage 1 CDI, despite only using quality-controlled eMODIS data, there were numerous and extensive instances of cloud cover impacts. These materialize as sudden, very low NDVI values in the quality-controlled time series. Also, the eMODIS suite of products includes 10-day composite datasets that are updated every five days.
To reconstruct a better NDVI time-series dataset without missing pixel values (cloud-affected), and to reduce noise, we used Savitzky-Golay filters to produce cloud free and daily interpolated NDVI time-series29,43. The filtered values have no cloud effect while still conserving the seasonal NDVI minima and maxima. Figure A5 shows an example of the effect from a pixel in Tall Zanoub, southern Lebanon.
CDI integration and ranking using sliding windows
To calculate the CDI, we first normalize the four components through percentile ranking. We used a sliding window approach44 to produce extra statistical datapoints with the objective of providing more realistic ranking results (credibility, salience) by smoothing fluctuations and helping identify extreme events (e.g.,45).
The sliding window approach generates six representations of the monthly value for each input index (and the integrated CDI). CDI6 represents the full month (e.g., 1–31 May), CDI5 is offset two days earlier (ie., 29 April–29 May), etc., with CDI1 being the full month offset twelve days earlier. This results in more than 120 total values for each month over the climatological baseline period (six values per month per year since February 2000, that date from which requisite satellite data is available).
We then use a linear model for CDI index integration as shown in Eq. 1 because it is easy to understand, simple to calculate, and has proven effective elsewhere (e.g.,46; legitimacy, accessibility).
Finally, each month, we rank solely CDI6 with the ranking based on values of CDI1-6 of that month of the whole period. We roughly follow drought class definitions of the U.S. Drought Monitor7:
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D0—“normal” with CDI over 20th percentile;
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D1—“moderate drought” with CDI between 10 and 20th percentiles;
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D2—“severe drought” with CDI between 2nd and 10th percentiles;
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D3—“extreme drought” with CDI under 2nd percentile.
Figure 2 provides a summary conceptual visualization of CDI production as detailed in this Section, and in Supplementary Information B, we describe the step-wise process. Figure 3 is an example of publicly available CDI outputs from Morocco.
CDI information dissemination using a web interface
In Jordan and Morocco, CDI outputs are incorporated into a web interface (accessibility) that enables various temporal and spatial aggregations of CDI data. This simplifies analysis and comparison of drought events, and it supports ongoing CDI developments (salience). For example, the web interface can be used to calculate a ‘cumulative seasonal CDI’ to evaluate drought conditions in specific areas over an agricultural season or year14 rather than monthly, and it can calculate the Drought Severity and Coverage Index (DSCI;47) at various scales. Figure 4 shows a web interface screenshot of sub-district level DSCI statistics in Jordan of the type that ministry officials produce and use to support decision-making, and Supplementary Information E is example guidance for officials on use of the web interface.
CDI validation findings and iterative refinements to the CDI
Overview
In Stages 1 and 2, we evaluated the data used to produce CDI input indices, those CDI input indices themselves, and the integrated CDI in each country. This included:
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Qualitative assessment of CDI performance with national government stakeholders (during all Stages);
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Comparison with available observation data (primarily for precipitation);
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Assessment of index and/or CDI performance as a function of land cover and use as well as relationship with cereals production; and
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Semi-quantitative assessment of CDI performance with local drought impact reporters.
In this Section, we describe validation results in more detail and how they, and stakeholder constraints and needs, influenced CDI refinements and use over time. Further we describe in categorical terms the refinements made to the CDI and briefly the effect of those changes.
Table C1 summarizes all the validation assessments undertaken, their results, and subsequent CDI refinements (or considerations for future refinements) in each country. Additional results from this Section are shown in Supplementary Information C and D.
Validation assessments and iterative refinements
Qualitative assessment of Stage 1 and 2 CDI
Stakeholders and the project team qualitatively assessed CDI outputs in all Stages in all countries. This happened in meetings and workshops that included both technical and policy staff from multiple government agencies (At least from meteorological departments and ministries with remits in agriculture and water; and Jobbins et al.6 describes the governance arrangements of the relevant inter-agency committees.) Participants used their expert opinion to assess CDI outputs from various years and seasons—particularly those with noted wet or dry tendencies and reported impacts48,49—and considering the results of analyses shown in this Section.
In Stages 1 and 2, stakeholders consistently noted concerns with CDI outputs’ spatial and temporal inconsistency. Firstly, missing data for input indices affected by cloud cover meant that the CDI outputs had missing monthly values for some pixels. This was especially problematic in mountainous areas of the project countries that are major sources of surface water runoff and groundwater recharge. Secondly, they described outputs as “noisy” because CDI classes varied significantly within relatively homogeneous sub-basins (i.e., “extreme drought” pixels adjacent to “moderately wet” pixels) or shifted between classes frequently across monthly time-steps. They considered this noise to be especially problematic in significant agricultural basins and rangelands zones.
Given the CDI’s intended spatial (sub-basin) and temporal (monthly) scales of assessment, this noise does not align with empirical knowledge of the relevant socio-environmental systems (credibility, legitimacy), though at finer spatial scales, this type of variation is expected due to micro-climates.
Through visual assessment of data outputs, we determined the main causes of noise were a.) the presence of clouds in the LST and NDVI products from MODIS (see Figures A2, A3, and A5), and b.) the short baseline period and therefore small population for percentile ranking of outputs. These findings led us to develop and apply—for all countries—the cloud masking and gap-filling methods for diurnal LST and NDVI (see sections "Novel application of harmonic analysis and Fourier transformations for cloud masking and gap-filling with data fusion" and "Improving NDVI outputs using Savitzky-Golay filters"), as well as the rolling window approach (2.3).
Iterative development of precipitation inputs
In Stage 1, we used CHIRPS final precipitation data to calculate SPI-3. We also investigated the use of IMERG data. IMERG has the full time-series available almost immediately after the end of the month as well as higher frequency of measurement. Respectively, this improves the timeliness of CDI production (salience) and statistical ranking (credibility).
In Stage 2, we produced SPI-3 using IMERG data. We had concluded from a relatively cursory review that IMERG compared adequately with ground-based measurements from rain gauges and weather radar (credibility;50,51,52,53,54,55). However, subsequent analysis of observed precipitation data (see Table 2; Supplementary Information D) showed that CHIRPS’ final product—and in some cases even the preliminary product (which is usually available at the same time as IMERG)—outperforms IMERG in most areas of the countries.
National stakeholders then considered trade-offs related to products’ accuracy (geographical and precipitation intensity), spatial resolution, timeliness of CDI production, and model complexity, and each national agency chose which input to use for the operational CDI as shown in Table 1 (credibility, salience, accessibility).
In Morocco, work on seasonal forecasting14 and the presence of relatively strong technical capabilities and computing capacity, enabled straightforward application of CNN models to improve the accuracy of CHIRPS’ preliminary product (see Supplementary Information A). This improved the timeliness of CDI production (salience) while minimizing loss in accuracy (credibility). In Jordan, officials opted to retain the use of IMERG because it proved more accurate in some badia semi-arid and arid regions where communities have high vulnerability to drought impacts (credibility, legitimacy;12,48. In Lebanon and Tunisia, modelling simplicity and information accuracy trumped the timeliness of production, and so they chose the CHIRPS final product (accessibility, credibility).
Assessment of relationship between CDI and rainfed agricultural systems’ production
In Stage 2, we quantitatively assessed the relationship between cereals production and yield data to CDI input indices and the integrated CDI in Jordan and Morocco (legitimacy). Results indicated that the CDI performed better than precipitation indices alone, though the relationship was complex due to the timing of drought stress and the specific agricultural effect (see Supplementary Information C and Tables C2 and C3). These analyses were not repeated in Stage 3 to compare results statistically.
These results supported stakeholders’ use of the CDI outputs for drought impact management through Drought Action Plan development (legitimacy, salience;6. They also informed the subsequent development of regression relationships between temporally and spatially aggregated CDI results and annual cereal production values14 as well as semi-quantitative evaluations described next.
Drought impact reporters’ semi-quantitative assessment and policy application pilots (Stage 3)
In Stage 2, we undertook semi-quantitative assessment of Tunisian local government officials’ assessment of CDI outputs. In Stage 3, we assessed drought impact reporters’ perceptions of CDI maps generally (various stakeholders, Tafilah Governorate, Jordan), and specifically in relation to rangelands (Moroccan local agriculture officials covering 27 rangelands areas—over 1.9 million ha, 90% of the officially recognized total).
Unfortunately, data quality from responses in Tunisia precluded structured analysis (response rate and location discrepancies), but the limited findings were consistent about CDI noise described in section "Qualitative assessment of Stage 1 and 2 CDI" and were also useful to consider highly local distribution of drought impacts and its relevance for policy decision-makers.
The Jordanian and Moroccan evaluations (results shown in full in12,14) supported CDI validation as well as piloting policy applications. In Jordan, drought reporters’ perceptions generally aligned with the CDI output in terms of temporal and spatial coverage as well as intensity; they found that the CHIRPS precipitation product over-estimated precipitation in Tafilah compared to IMERG and station data. In Morocco, there was strong alignment between CDI information and expert estimation of drought location (average 74%) and severity (average 71%), with lowest accuracies in forested and snow-affected areas.
In Jordan, this validation informed the choice of precipitation index inputs for the CDI as well as disbursal of government funds (Takaful fund) for drought-impacted smallholder farmers; in Morocco, it tested the CDI’s viability to support implementation of Rangelands Law 113–13 and provided evidence to inform potential future CDI modifications for that purpose (e.g., land cover masks).
Programming refinements to ease of CDI production
Stakeholders consistently noted the need to minimize the complexity and computing requirements for CDI production because agency officials had to be able to produce it independently3. This took some trial and error.
During Stages 1 and 2, the CDI production process was cumbersome and national agencies did not have the capacity to do the advanced modelling regularly. Therefore, project team staff provided SMA and diurnal LST inputs to national agencies who then integrated them into the CDI.
The initial programming framework was in Linux. However, the lead agencies had few people skilled in use of Linux. During Stages 1 and 2, as a first attempt to simplify the process, we migrated the programming framework to Windows. Unfortunately, frequent Windows updates were highly problematic because they led to issues such as code libraries being corrupted or removed on a regular basis.
In response, in Stage 3, we returned to Linux and focused instead on ensuring the programming framework linked all CDI production components effectively, especially the necessary LIS and Noah-MP model components. Likewise, we developed scripts to make most of the CDI production steps nearly fully automated. The most important aspect to simplify (because of the underlying coding complexity) was to make the Noah-MP model link to and be interoperable with the CDI model. Also, we supported installation and use of dedicated servers for data processing and modelling, as well as ongoing training for agency staff to use the LIS and CDI modelling frameworks.
Objectives of CDI refinements and description of refinements in categorical terms
In summary, refinements made to the CDI system between Stages 1 and 3 aimed to:
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ensure the CDI outputs cover the entire domain each month (credibility);
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reduce CDI output noise and improve spatio-temporal coherence (credibility and legitimacy); and
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enable national agencies to produce the CDI autonomously, quickly and regularly, and relatively easily (salience)
In categorical terms, the CDI validation efforts informed subsequent refinements in accordance with Rykiel’s18 schema:
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Model re-calibration through changes in parameter values;
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Structural changes to the model; and
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Restricting the model to a smaller domain.
CDI modelling refinements from the Stage 1 to Stage 3 CDI included the following (primarily credibility; secondly salience and legitimacy):
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Change in input datasets for SPI-3: from CHIRPS final to other products in some countries (see Table 1);
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Additional pre-processing of input data, and change in input dataset for diurnal LST: use of harmonic analysis and gap-filling (see section "Novel application of harmonic analysis and Fourier transformations for cloud masking and gap-filling with data fusion");
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Additional pre-processing of input data for NDVI: use of Savitsky-Golay filters (see section "Improving NDVI outputs using Savitzky-Golay filters"); and
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Modification of the CDI ranking and calculation procedures: use of sliding windows (see section "CDI integration and ranking using sliding windows").
Additionally, to accommodate the end of the MODIS mission, we modified the CDI framework to use either eMODIS or VIIRS input data through the “creation” of VIIRS data for 2000–2012 using eMODIS data and applying geometric mean regression56 to determine regression coefficients at the pixel level (accessibility).
Assessing effects of CDI refinements
We presented CDI outputs from various Stages side by side for expert officials to evaluate. This included (a) focused consideration of wet and dry months and years they knew well (credibility, legitimacy; example in Fig. 5) and (b) information from the entire period (2000-present) presented in relation to CDI monthly values as well as annual aggregations (example in Fig. 6;57).
They concluded from these assessments, in conjunction with drought impact reporters’ results (section "Drought impact reporters’ semi-quantitative assessment and policy application pilots (Stage 3)"), that refinements had substantial positive effects on CDI outputs, especially in relation to locational accuracy and CDI noise in a manner concordant with expectations.
For example, in Fig. 5, the Stage 1 CDI showed severe drought categories (dark red) interspersed with relatively humid categories (light blue). In contrast, the Stage 3 CDI was more consistent regionally, and the localized variation was less extreme. Also, the Stage 1 CDI miscategorized the coastal Tangiers and Rif area as relatively humid (the Stage 3 CDI had it as severely dry), when in reality there were significant drought impacts there58.
Likewise, Fig. 6 shows the Stage 2 CDI (using IMERG and without the modelling improvements) and Stage 3 CDI outputs aggregated annually using the DSCI. Stakeholders considered the Stage 3 CDI outputs to reflect inter-annual progression of dry years in the late 2010s and early 2020s more accurately per their knowledge of meteorological, agricultural, and hydrological conditions in those years.
Discussion and conclusions
Considering trade-offs and constraints in CDI development
At the outset, we faced three critical questions framing CDI development:
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What type of process or decision-making should the monitoring information support59;
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Which socio-environmental system(s) should be the focus of monitoring60; and
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How to develop the CDI so that agencies can and do continue to produce it16.
Stakeholder needs assessments3,4 and subsequent engagement for Drought Action Plan development enabled articulation of CDI requirements, which largely answer questions one and two: the CDI should provide technical “triggers” for drought management actions focused on rainfed agriculture6. Further, considerations of which specific areas were prioritized for monitoring guided subsequent modifications. For example, in Jordan, the desire for most accurate results in badia and certain arid areas guided choices about SPI-3 data inputs and in Morocco, needs for rangelands monitoring guide near-term potential improvements.
Most of the research presented in this paper relates primarily to question three: in CDI development, our core focus was balancing the need for a relatively simple modelling system that met the credibility, salience, legitimacy, and accessibility requirements for political decision-making. This was a critical consideration for CDI development.
For instance, as shown in Table C1, validation studies proposed modifications to the CDI structure such as variable input weights per agro-ecological zone or land cover class. However, government officials in all countries chose not to pursue that route for multiple reasons:
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The simplicity of CDI calculation, production, and interpretation is a paramount feature for its salience, and adding such complexity would undermine those core characteristics61;
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They took statistical and ontological uncertainties62,63 into consideration: the additional scarcity (and in some cases absence) of observation data in each classification zone meant that outputs of a more complex and spatially precise CDI could not be evaluated as rigorously using observation data (credibility), and
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Given that ground-truthing was critical for legitimacy, any changes that would preclude agencies’ ability to validate the outputs with observation data would lead to outputs being perceived as less credible and legitimate61.
Therefore, rather than focusing energy and resources on geographically determined model refinement at this stage, government agencies prioritized general modelling improvements and building user/stakeholder engagement mechanisms including officials in the regions to provide ongoing quantitative and qualitative feedback on the CDI like that provided by drought impact reporters (section "Drought impact reporters’ semi-quantitative assessment and policy application pilots (Stage 3)").
Value and challenge of using a common regional modelling framework
The MENAdrought project always intended to develop drought monitoring systems for national application. The fact that stakeholders in all countries prioritized monitoring associated with rainfed cereals impacts enabled us to start from a common modelling framework and tailor the system to fit individual countries’ needs while replicating improvements across countries efficiently. This supports replicability of the modelling system in other countries to support the World Meteorological Organization’s objective to cover all people with early warning systems by 203064. Indeed, already the system has been replicated with government agencies in Tunisia14 and used in Georgia65. It also enables regional approaches to training and peer learning, including the possibility for regional centres of excellence.
At the national level, having a common modelling framework across agencies is key because it requires involved agencies to agree on the underlying objectives and purposes of drought monitoring, and by implication eventual drought definitions. This supports cross-government coordination in both drought monitoring and management responses.
Still, challenges with employing a common modelling framework are rife. In particular, data-sharing and associated coordination within countries and at the regional level continue to be primary barriers. Also, involved agencies have different remits and underlying goals, and so reaching common ground takes time and effort of which output validation is a core component.
Considering model validation in an operational policy context
Our findings show that multiple types of validation were necessary for stakeholder acceptance of the CDI. Quantitative and semi-quantitative validation were critical for stakeholder perceptions of the CDI’s salience and credibility15 despite the dearth of observation data. In addition, much like for the development of the U.S. Drought Monitor7,66,67, qualitative application of expert opinion and subjective knowledge—elicited in multiple manners—were also critical for stakeholder perceptions of its credibility and legitimacy.
This is likely because the process enabled the application of multiple knowledge types and fostered (a) transparency in the product’s development, (b) officials’ perception that the CDI is credible as we have improved it over time, and, (c) heightened trust in its developers and purveyors through ongoing collaboration and problem-solving2,16.
Agencies’ continued production of the CDI by their own staff on their own servers, its incorporation in Drought Action Plans, and its use to target relief efforts and otherwise support consequential decision-making indicate that government stakeholders consider it valid6,59. Also, agencies have identified future paths (for example, use of land cover masks or crop maps) to increase the CDI’s credibility overall and salience to support specific types of decision-making, though these would increase CDI production complexity.
These results strongly reinforce findings elsewhere (e.g.,10) that development of environmental monitoring tools for policy application benefits from sequential and iterative development as well as robust interaction between producers of the tools and their end-users. Further, they show potential routes to consider, develop, and test robustly the scientific tools for policy application that governments across the Global South increasingly use, and that international institutions and donors incentivize them to use through climate change adaptation funding mechanisms64.
Data availability
The datasets generated and/or analysed during the current study are not publicly available due to the fact that they are produced by the relevant government agencies but are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
This publication was made possible through the support of the Office of Technical Support, Bureau for the Middle East, U.S. Agency for International Development, under the terms of Award No. 7200-ME-18-IO-00001. The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. Agency for International Development or the United States government. We would particularly like to acknowledge Sonia Massis (USAID) for guidance and support of the MENAdrought project, the numerous national partners in Jordan, Lebanon, and Morocco who have helped the CDI become operational, Lucy Lawrenson for editorial support, and Hiroko Kato Beaudoing (UMD/ESSIC, NASA/GSFC) of the GLDAS team, for processing and maintaining this dataset over the years, and Jossy Jacob (SSAI, NASA/GSFC) for maintaining the record on Discover and via the LIS data portal.
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K.B. and S.F. wrote the main manuscript text. R.M. was the Project Lead. K.B., M.B.F., S.F., E.A.-K., J.A.-B., A.F., M.Y., H.B., K.A., S.K., A.H., and W.N. conducted the analyses. A.G., O.H., M.F., F.C., and H.B.M. structured the analyses, and guided and supported the work in the four countries. C.P.-L., M.H., M.S., and R.M. provided intellectual leadership.
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Bergaoui, K., Fraj, M.B., Fragaszy, S. et al. Development of a composite drought indicator for operational drought monitoring in the MENA region. Sci Rep 14, 5414 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-55626-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-55626-0
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